Centre for Catholic Studies Podcast
Ein Podcast von Centre for Catholic Studies
132 Folgen
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Eilish Gregory - The Global Nursing Mission of the Little Company of Mary, 1877-1941
Vom: 28.3.2025 -
Antonia Pizzey - Imagining Church: Mystery, Imagination, and Metaphor
Vom: 20.2.2025 -
Liam Temple - This Poverty of Spirit: The Capuchins on the margins of Catholicism
Vom: 22.1.2025 -
Emma Percy - Can Aquinas offer some hope to trauma theology?
Vom: 6.12.2024 -
Bishop Dunn Memorial Lecture 2024 - Fr Hyacinthe Destivelle
Vom: 29.11.2024 -
Nomi Pritz-Bennett: The Natural Mortification of Finitude: Loss and the Construction of Real Persons
Vom: 24.10.2024 -
Tina Beattie - Language, Desire And Creation In The Context Of Laudato Si
Vom: 7.6.2024 -
Alana Harris - Student Power In Christ The Young Christian Students, Race And Liberation Theology
Vom: 7.6.2024 -
Mary Beth Ingham: Reading Scotus today: Franciscan foundations for a renewed Christian humanism
Vom: 9.4.2024 -
Margaret Carney: The Third Order Rule of 1982: Discovery, Disruption and Renewed Dedication
Vom: 9.4.2024 -
Giuseppe Buffon: A rule that saves? The Capuchin response to the institutional crisis
Vom: 9.4.2024 -
Stefan Walser - So What…Religious Indifference As A Fundamental Theological Challenge
Vom: 21.2.2024 -
Marc Loustau - Studying Theology Ethnographically
Vom: 23.1.2024 -
Billy Crozier - The Quince Made Sweet: Love and Suffering in St Bonaventure's Tree of Life
Vom: 15.12.2023 -
After the Vatican synod: what happens now?
Vom: 21.11.2023 -
Richardson Lecture 2023 - Fr Hans Boersma
Vom: 15.11.2023 -
A conversation with the “spiritual father” of the synod
Vom: 31.10.2023 -
Thomas Weinandy - Does God Suffer?
Vom: 13.10.2023 -
How does the new Synod process work?
Vom: 12.10.2023 -
The Synod and Christian Unity
Vom: 12.10.2023
The Durham Centre for Catholic Studies is the first of its kind in British higher education. It represents a creative partnership between academy and church: a centre within the pluralist, public academy for critically constructive Catholic studies of the highest academic standing. The aims of the Centre for Catholic Studies are: -To provide a distinctive forum for the creative analysis of key issues in Catholic thought, culture, and practice. -To engage, inform and shape public and ecclesial life from a leading knowledge and research base. -To engage the breadth and depth of Catholic tradition in conversation both with the full range of disciplines and perspectives in a leading university and with the range of other faith traditions. -To develop and pursue major collaborative and interdisciplinary research projects and to attract associated grant awards and philanthropic support. -To model a vibrant and inclusive community of scholars of Catholicism and practitioners of Catholic theology. -To form outstanding theologians who will shape the future from the richness of Catholic tradition in the church, academy, and public life. -To foster and develop excellent working relationships with relevant regional, national and international public and ecclesial bodies.
